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Roger Moutenot
New York to Nashville
By Kevin Robinson
(Photos by Barbara Moutenot)
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You’ve done a lot of work at Alex the Great and House
of David, is there something there that keeps bringing you back?
I love House of David. They have this analog tape machine that
they bought after the Yo La Tengo session for I Can Hear the Heart
Beating as One. We did that whole record on ADATs. That’s
the only Yo La Tengo record that was ever recorded on ADATs. We
wound up mixing to analog though. But I’ve done a lot of work
at Alex the Great, and the greatest thing about that place is that
anything you want, all the guitars, keyboard, organs, Acetones,
vibes, piano... if you have an idea it’s all there for you
to use. The vibe is great and so is the rate. It’s awesome.
I wound up at House of David because Alex the Great was booked up.
And that place has an API. I love APIs, and it’s funky too.
I like funky studios, where you feel like you can put your feet
up or if an ash drops on the floor nobody’s going to freak.
How do you usually start setting up? Say, with mic’ing
the drums?
At House of David they had this drum set already set up, microphones
placed, baffles set up, and I started tearing it all down and they
flipped. Come to find out they haven’t moved it in about 4
years. Like the mics even! Whenever I record Yo La Tengo it’s
pretty much no headphones. They can’t do that. They’re
so used to rehearsing that way. So it’s a real live situation.
How do you approach recording a band like Yo La Tengo?
We’ll do it all live, sometimes with vocals that go flying
in the room. And then we’ll put a few things on it, put the
song to bed and move on to the next one. One of the things I like
about Yo La Tengo is that we never brought in people. There might
have been a few guest appearances, but you know Georgia will play
vibes. Georgia doesn’t play vibes, but there’s something
beautiful about that. You don’t have this guy that’s
just flowery on the vibes, you’ve got Georgia and she’s
just reaching for that C and is just an 8th note behind. And that’s
character and I love that. Spontaneous, and just flying by the seat
of her pants. She’s making it work somehow, but it’s
not pristine. In fact one time we did something really cool. I think
that was the …Heart Beating… record. We invited about
40 people to Alex the Great and set the band up, gave them monitor
wedges and recorded them right in front of the people. I think we
wound up using like 2 or 3 tracks from that session.
Just to get the vibe of a live show?
Yeah. Yo La Tengo is a really tense band. You know? And they work
off that. If it’s not tense then something’s wrong.
If they’re having too much fun or things are going too well,
then something’s wrong. There always has to be a little tension.
And it took me a couple of records to get into that. When I did
Painful, I had no idea what was going on. I thought, “This
record’s going to fall apart any second,” but we made
it through and it was very appropriately named Painful. But since
then I’ve realized what they go through making a record, and
they realize what my thing is and it all kind of works out. But
it’s so cool to see that transition of recording their records.
Did you invite a crowd in on the newest YLT Record?
Uh, no. We didn’t invite anybody, but we again went back
into a real live situation. We’d set up things like, Ira would
have his first guitar bit set up in one area of the studio, like
set up some amps in the tiled room. Then he’d lay that part
down and let the feedback roll a little and just walk over to the
drums and start doing something with Georgia for another part of
the song. Then he’d get off that and go do something else.
So there’s a lot of moving. James would have his delay pedals
feedback on out and then leave them to go play a keyboard part.
So we get a lot done in one song if we plan it out like that.

It’s all happening live going down to tape like that?
Yeah, like Ira will be walking around… like when he leaves
the live room and is going into this area where there’s another
amp set up, I’ll have another set of NS10s set up playing
so he can hear what Georgia and James are playing. So, it gets pretty
involved.
How do you deal with the bleed?
I love bleed.
But a lot of Georgia’s drumming is brush-work and
soft at times and the band is often very dynamic. How do you deal
with that?
It’s taken me a while, because they also sing like [makes
high whisper noise]. The first time I recorded them I thought the
mic was broken. I walked out to the room, because I had the mic-pre
cranked and I was still getting no level. I was like, “What
the”…and I went out there and I said, “Could you
sing for a second?” And it was literally like [makes higher
whisper noise], and I thought, “Okay now I get it.”
We really work on the vibe of the recording, and I’d really
rather capture the vibe. When you let things play over and over,
and you’ve been working on it and you’ve been trying
to get a sound and hours are going by, you’re past it. The
band is lost. Especially with Yo La Tengo. In fact Ira has this
saying, “This is getting tired.” But as for bleed, we’ll
have amps set up in rooms to create more bleed. I’ll put a
mic over the drums, feed it into a Fender amp, put some reverb on
it and have it facing back into the drums. Just put vibrato on it
and stuff like that. We’ll try to be creative and use the
bleed to our advantage, especially tracking without headphones.
I worked with T-Bone Burnett and he taught me so much about bleed.
You sit down and talk with that guy and it’s the best time
you’ve ever had. He’s got great ideas, like he’ll
get three things going on the low end. Just [makes low throaty noise].
And you’re thinking the mix is going to sound awful. But then
you find there is something he’s going for and he gets it
by taking that route. He’s taught me a lot about just one
mic recording. You know bleed with bleed? He loves bleed, even more
than me.
What are some of your favorite toys, no matter where you
go, that you have to bring with you?
SansAmp. I love it. That is an incredible little tool. I always
bring my Moog. I have two Echoplexes that I always like to have
along, one that is tube that I got for 25 bucks here in Nashville.
I personally don’t have an extensive microphone collection
right now, but I have this podium mic that’s just weird. It’s
just a long goose-necked omni-directional mic. It just sounds great.
Vocals for Ira, sometimes a 57 would be stuck like this [shoves
hand straight up in front of face]. Every singer’s different.
And everything that you’re going for from song to song may
be different. You might want a vocal big and just right there inside
your head, or you may want smaller and a little thrown off or something
like that. So there’s never one vocal mic that I always use.
I try not to do that. Anything too much the same - I hate that.
I used to assist this guy when I first started, and he drew me a
template for his drum sounds. These are the mic’s you use,
this is the mic pre-sets, this is the placement of the mics. So
he would just walk in and it would all be ready to go. Weirdly enough,
the drums almost always sounded the same no matter who was playing
them or if it was a different kit.
Did you go to school for all of this?
I did. I went because I was in a band, and had a studio in my parent’s
house. I was recording my own band, and all of a sudden neighborhood
bands and guys coming in from other towns would want to come in
and record. I felt like I didn’t know what the hell I was
doing and I had two 4-tracks.
Would you recommend going to school for up and coming producers/engineers?
Um… I would. Although I gotta say that in the year I went
to school I learned a little bit about how things worked, inside
guts-wise, and hardly anything about how to listen to something.
And that really only comes from experience. You know, just trying
it out. My first gig was building ballasts. They asked if I did
carpentry work, and I was like, “Yeah.” I built these
things with ten thousand nails in them and weighing at least a hundred
pounds and they STILL wobbled! But they kept me on and I could easily
say that in about 3 months I learned more than I had ever known
before. Just by hanging out and doing alignments and all that stuff
I learned so much just by watching the guys. It was an incredible
education. So if you could have both, that would be the way to do
it.
Do you have a record or project that is the closest to
the sonic vision that you had for it in the beginning? A “most
proud of” recording?
That’s only coming about now. I’ll be the first one
to say it - that I’m learning with every record that I do.
There’s so much more to know. It has only been until the last
couple of records that I feel that I’m starting to get comfortable.
I don’t mean comfortable as in lazy, but where if there’s
something I’m going for I know how to do it now. And this
is the first time I’m feeling like musically and sonically
that there is this whole wide range of things I can pull from. If
there is something new I want to go for I feel like I know how to
get there. So I guess I’ll honestly say it was the last record
that I did that I’m most happy with. Every record that I do
is like a new stepping stone. You know, all those Yo La Tengo records
I look back on and say, “Oh, if I’d only have…”
and I think everybody does that, but you know, it propels me into
trying to reach my goal. Where I came from, working with Arto Lindsay
and all these guys that were just wacko, downtown New York, you
know, just out-there... like I’m trying to mix stuff that
is a half step out of the key of the song and it really taught me
a lot. And I always pull from that. So I can have a pop hit and
dement it somehow. Not in a way that I’m trying to destroy
it, or take it away from the radio. Although personally I don’t
care, as long as it turns out how the band likes it. I like to produce
records where I’m not just making myself happy. I’ve
gone from Gypsy Kings, to Paula Cole, to Yo La Tengo and I love
that I’m not captured into one little category.
Living in Nashville, surely you’ve done some work
on a country record.
My first country assignment was a favor to a friend that I’d
known for a while. Never worked on a country record before, and
I got my first call, and I was like, “Uuuggghhh... okay.”
It was a favor because the engineer got sick and they were about
to track this Hal Ketchum record and they needed somebody. So I
said, “Okay.” He says, “Great we’re going
to start at 8:30 tomorrow morning.” What? So I go in there
and there’s this, “Fwap, fwap, fwap,” click track
going on. And the drummer’s just, “Boom, tap, boom,
tap.” The only problem is that the song had this backbeat
feel to it, and the drummer was just right on the click. And I said,
“Shouldn’t the snare just sort of fall? I mean everything
else is just flowing.” And they just didn’t get it.
And that’s the difference right there. Fuck the feeling of
the song, just get the part down. Jill Sobule played drums on her
record. You know, just real simple and sometimes awkward, but the
tracks just sounded gorgeous. As opposed to someone who’s
right there on the money.
That’s a great mentality to have, but as a producer
you must run into situations where that isn’t the financially
profitable standpoint to take.
Here’s the deal. If you do something your way and the way
the band wants it and it does hit... like Paula Cole, okay? We didn’t
go in and record that record to make it break. I don’t really
have that in me. It made it and that was the thing. Paula and I
made that record in three weeks and when it was all said and done,
it did well. So great. That’s the beauty of it. With Yo La
Tengo we go in and do what we want to do. If it clicks and people
like it, then that’s better. Better than you sitting there
trying to make something formatted that you think people are going
to like to listen to.r
*It should be noted that after this interview I found Princes
Hot Chicken Shack and had lunch there. It is still very much in
business, and I’m still recovering.
Roger’s new studio is at Woodland
Studios,
www.naprs.org/members/woodland 615-262-2222
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